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Emotionally Weird |  | Author: Kate Atkinson Creator: Frances Tomelty Publisher: HarperCollins Category: Book
List Price: £10.99 Buy New: £3.99 as of 29/7/2010 14:21 MDT details You Save: £7.00 (64%)
New (1) Used (4) from £2.00
Seller: vinyljohn1 Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 3748949
Format: Abridged, Audiobook Media: Audio Cassette Edition: Abridged edition Number Of Items: 2
ISBN: 0001056468 EAN: 9780001056466 ASIN: 0001056468
Publication Date: March 20, 2000 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk Review Family history and identity are Kate Atkinson's twinned keynote themes. Behind the Scenes at the Museum (winner of the Whitbread Book of the year), had "The Family" at its centre, a sweep of charming, related genes who sauntered through the fin de siècle to the less glamorous 1992. Her second novel, Human Croquet starred the Fairfaxes, all missing mothers, perfumed with nicotine and danger, and strange aunts. Larkin may be right, your parents fuck you up but in Atkinson's novels you have to find out who they are before you can start laying blame. On the surface, Emotionally Weird follows the trend. Effie and her mother Nora are staying in the decaying family home on a small island off the West coast of Scotland. To keep themselves amused they begin telling stories. Nora's are about their ancestors, in whose veins blood blue as "delphiniums and lupins" flows, and the real identity of Effie's father and mother. Nora's language is like her "sea-change eyes", full of poetry and strange beauty. Effie's tales of life at the University of Dundee and her life with Star Trek obsessed Bob are more prosaic and funny: "I did so hope that Bob was a dress rehearsal, a kind of mock relationship, like a mock exam, to prepare me for the real thing." The novel becomes troublesome where it follows Effie to a creative writing course at the university. The class is run by Martha: who writes poetry "with impenetrable syntax about a life where nothing happened." The other characters in the novel are pre-occupied with the same need to find meaning through writing. Archetypal detective stories, sword and sorcery fantasy, doctor and nurse romantic scenarios, existential angst and liberal use of ellipses are given free reign. Whilst this self-conscious wordplay is fun for those who enjoy a more literary book, those who simply enjoy a good read may get lost in the jostle of competing language construction. In this novel, confused paternity is only part of the struggle for identity, the words you use are also defining- you are what you write. Some readers will revel in the Shandy-esque shape of the experimental in this narrative, others may find it's a literary joke taken too far.--Eithne Farry.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 35
Overstretched joke April 12, 2010 Anna Lowenstein (Palestrina, Italy) For the first few chapters I thought this book, mostly set in a university in the 70s, was hilarious. I loved the description of the tutorial: the lecturer spouting incomprehensible deconstructionist theory to a collection of bored UCCA rejects dressed in a variety of 70s student clothing: the boys in Afghan coats, flared jeans and tie-dyed T-shirts, while the girls have apparently wandered in out of some tatty fancy-dress party.
After a while, though, I started to get fed up. A chapter of this was funny, but not two chapters, three chapters... a whole book. There are limits how far you can stretch a joke, and this joke just went on and on and on. Nothing much seemed to be happening and so many characters were introduced, both students and lecturers, that I had to make a note of their names to keep track of them all. The funny thing was that the writer was fully aware of the faults in her own book and even pointed them out to the reader. The story is being told by Effie to her mother Nora, and at times Nora chips in with comments like, "Plot development?" ("Is not necessary in this post-modern day and age," Effie tells her), or even "For heaven's sake, not another character. There are far too many already, and all these minor ones, what's the point? You introduce them, give them a trace of character and then abandon them."
It is very daring for a writer to point out to the reader how she is breaking the rules for writing a readable novel - she will only risk doing it if she believes she can get away with it. The trouble is that Atkinson doesn't get away with it. I was confused by the large number of characters, and bored with the aimless way the story was meandering. This no doubt was meant to imitate the aimless life of the protagonist, but having understood everything there is to understand about Effie's student life, the reader does needs some reason for carrying on beyond the first sixty pages. The hints that Effie's mother was not really her mother, and that she was going to find out who her father was, were not enough to retain my interest, as it soon became obvious that this major piece of information was going to be dropped at random and without reference to the slowly unfurling main plot.
At one point when the author intervened in a particularly arbitrary way I began to ask myself why bother finishing the book at all. Any novel is about an invented world, but at least while you're reading it, you want to believe in that world. Otherwise, why bother?
But the real problem of the book, and the reason I grew bored with it, was not even the lack of plot. After a while I began to see that the characters and the situation, which at first had seemed humorous, were actually caricatures; and a book based entirely on caricatures cannot be satisfying.
Emotionally Weird - but not a weird read... September 6, 2009 Gilly Gill (UK) This book was recommended by Amazon as one of those "you might like this" options that pop up. I had not read Kate Atkinson before, but I loved this book from the first page to the last. It is very well written, from a teenager's perspective on a dysfunctional family life. Coincidentally, it was set in the 1960's which was also my era and lots of what Kate writes about, brought memories flooding back. I thoroughly enjoyed it and have already lent it to a friend - insisting she read it too! I am now half-way through another of Kate's novels and plan on reading all her others
Good for locals July 31, 2009 Gillian Ross I enjoyed this book, the style, the different stories. It read a bit like a comedy soap opera.
As a Dundee University graduate now living in Dundee I found all the local references enchanting - but therin lies the problem. If you had never been to Dundee, would you care about the local details? Im not so sure
An under-appreciated gem January 29, 2009 Dilly (Devon, England) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of those books you can return to over and over again. Atkinson presents some brilliantly apt and wry observations on student life (it hasn't changed much in the 35-odd years since).
I particularly enjoyed the glimpses into the various characters' literary forays and found the mystery of Effie's parentage gripping. It's something that once you've read, you can just dip in and out of; some of the scenes make me chuckle out loud even now.
Bonnie Dundee? March 28, 2008 the macrae (London United Kingdom) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Dundee is a weird place and this book has discovered the best (perhaps the only) way to write about it. Kate Atkinson catches the tone of the place in the way for example, she presents us with the two old Dundee wifies and her gift for suggesting accent and dialect while not excluding the foreign reader is superb. Dundee was my father's town and to an extent, mine and the book is a bit of a personal nostalgia binge and may indeed overdo as others have said the 'here is a bit of crap creative writing'. But for the playfulness and humour, I found my second reading even better than the first. It is a ghost story and reminds us that all our pasts are made up, our past lives largely imaginary with various versions created to suit different people and different times of our lives. Enjoy.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 35
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